In March 1861, Arizona Territory seceded from the Union. However, the Arizona that announced it was leaving the United States bore only a passing resemblance to the present-day state of Arizona. What is today Arizona and New Mexico at the beginning of the 1860s were part of New Mexico Territory, with its capital at Santa Fe. The Arizona Territory, created by secession in March 1861, compromised the southern half of New Mexico Territory (see map below), with two significant political centers, Mesilla in the east and Tucson in the west.

The Ordinance of Secession, creating the Arizona Territory and announcing its intention to join the Confederacy, passed in a convention in Mesilla on March 16, 1861, and a second convention at Tucson on March 28, 1861.

Since 1856, settlers in southern New Mexico Territory had sought to split off and organize their own territorial government. Their aspiration got caught up in the growing sectional tensions of the late 1850s and the belief in the U.S. Congress that the impetus to divide New Mexico Territory into two separate northern and southern territories was that the settlers hoped to expand slavery into the southern portion.

Whether slavery could have taken root in a Confederate Arizona Territory is at best uncertain. In any case, the entity did not last long. While Texas troops drove federal forces from southern New Mexico Territory in the Summer 1861, defeats there in 1862, especially at Glorieta Pass, effectively ended Confederate control of the region. In 1863, the federal government finally split New Mexico territory in half, but on a line running north-south instead of east west, creating an Arizona Territory that in 1912 finally gained statehood. Interestingly, its Confederate origins were recognized by choosing February 14 as the date Arizona became a state–the same date Jefferson Davis in 1862 had recognized it as a territory of the Confederacy. But slavery was only indirectly behind its creation.

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About Donald R. Shaffer

Donald R. Shaffer is the author of _After the Glory: The Struggles of Black Civil War Veterans_ (Kansas, 2004), which won the Peter Seaborg Award for Civil War Scholarship in 2005. More recently he published (with Elizabeth Regosin), _Voices of Emancipation: Understanding Slavery, the Civil War, and Reconstruction through the U.S. Pension Bureau Files_ (2008). Dr. Shaffer teaches online exclusively (i.e., a virtual professor). He lives in Arizona and can be contacted at donald_shaffer@yahoo.com

4 Responses to Sometimes The Civil War Wasn’t About Slavery (Well Sort Of)

If the Civil War was about slavery, then a million white men lost their lives because of slavery. In other words: whites paid a bigger price than blacks for the institution of slavery. Talk about politically incorrect! Of course you’re not allowed to say any such thing — never mind that it’s true.

Hi Clarke. My point in this blog post was limited to the situation in New Mexico Territory (which includes present-day Arizona and New Mexico). Plus, a million white men didn’t die in the Civil War. The current accepted estimate is 620,000 deaths, although some scholars are now pushing for the figure to be revised higher (see the Disunion blog in the New York Times). Plus, whatever the figure, proportionately more African-American soldiers died in the Civil War. The vast majority of Civil War deaths were due to disease, and since conditions in the camps of black Union troops were worse than for white soldiers and the quality of medical care poorer, this fact shouldn’t be surprising. So proportionately black troops paid their share of the butcher’s bill for ending slavery and more.

Clarke:
It would be impossible for whites to have paid a bigger price for slavery than African-Americans considering the centuries of enslavement, of being used as farm equipment and living in conditions one today wouldn’t want to see an animal living in, which no one can put a price on as well as the countless deaths on the infamous Middle Passage. Why do you think slave traders licked the skin of prospective slaves in Africa to see if they retained enough salt to survive the Middle Passage? Because it was that arduous of a journey and many, many died along the way.

Secondly, though anyone with any understanding of American history realizes that slavery, specifically its extension into the western territories stolen from Mexico or its non-extension, was the underlying root cause of secession and civil war it is a virtual certainty that exceedingly few white Union soldiers fought and died to end the institution. The overriding goal was to reunite the country under the federal government, not to end slavery. The north was extremely racist itself. A huge amount of white northern workers were terrified of the prospect of free black men competing with them for scarce jobs. The “Free-Soilers” in the midwest abhorred slavery… because it would present unfair competition to their small family farms. If believing that slavery has to be abolished come Hell or high water was a requirement for serving in the Union army it would have been a very small army indeed. Don’t be deluded into thinking that the end result was the motivation for enlistment.

Pretty interesting ,if obscure part of southwest history. From what I know about this era in AZ history, confederate aligned militias (including the earliest incarnation of the Arizona rangers), were fighting apaches and bandits before the union California column drove the rebels out in the summer of ’62. From there, the bloody apache wars would expand and be waged until the surrender of Geronimo in 1886.It was a tragic and wild era of this region.